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Discover LudwigThe phrase "proprietary rights" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in legal, business, or intellectual property contexts to refer to ownership rights over certain assets or information.
Example: "The company has established proprietary rights over its software, preventing others from using it without permission."
Alternatives: "ownership rights" or "exclusive rights."
Exact(55)
(The regents, in fact, had no proprietary rights in the land of their subjects).
© The copyright and other proprietary rights in these patterns are owned by Celia Birtwell Ltd.
We felt proprietary rights over the cranberry bogs, the coyotes, the mussel beds and the gannets.
Some dogs have been known to be unreasonable when it comes to the proprietary rights to found objects, particularly food.
One organization should not have proprietary rights to the D.S.M.; those rights should be in the public domain.
Celera has no proprietary rights over the human genome per se, just over its version of that genome.
Similar(5)
"This notion now that they have some proprietary right to it is historically inaccurate".
The performances are preludes to dialogues in which, according to Doerries, "the privileged who feel they have a proprietary right to be speaking about these stories are listening to people who've never come into contact with them before but who have something to teach us all about what these stories actually signify".
However a person setting fire to his own house which is subject to a mortgage can be charged because the mortgagee will have a proprietary right or interest in the property.
And the answer I come up with time and time again is these stories are not the proprietary right of the educated elite who may care about them which is terrific, and I mean them no disrespect but I think these stories belong to the people who've lived them.
Section 10(2) of the Act specifies that property shall be regarded as belonging to any person — :(a) having the custody or control of it; :(b) having in it any proprietary right or interest (not being an equitable interest arising only from an agreement to transfer or grant an interest); or :(c) having a charge on it.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com